Saturday, August 30, 2025

KNOWLEDGE: What we are reading and hearing

 


What we are reading and hearing

About Fascism, health Nazis, cruelty, and more.  Some good news is in red.



How to send several emails to lawmakers at once, and get advice. 

https://resist.bot/

Federal cuts are coming to our community in increasing numbers.  87 people at USU have been impacted-at least.

Utah State University lays off researchers after Trump administration cuts federal grants

The northern Utah school said seven staff and about 80 student or part-time positions have been impacted.



Utah's Bryan Schott

A deadline with teeth in gerrymandering ruling

Having covered Utah politics for more than a quarter century, I’m usually as confident as Macbeth that Birnam Wood won’t budge—until once in a while, the trees move and I have to rewrite the act.

What I did not anticipate was the extremely clever maneuver by Judge Dianna Gibson that could keep the legislature from dodging new maps.

In her ruling, Gibson gave lawmakers until Sept. 24 to draw new congressional maps that follow Proposition 4’s guardrails: no use of partisan data and no splitting municipalities and counties when it can be avoided.

That's just 29 days from now, which is a very aggressive timeline. But it’s aggressive for a reason. During litigation, the lieutenant governor’s office argued that any new maps must be in place by early November for logistical reasons and so candidates can prepare their campaigns.

Here's the clever part.

If the GOP-controlled legislature balks or submits maps that flout Prop. 4, the court takes over. In that case, the plaintiffs or a third party can submit map proposals, and the court will implement one. That renders moot any attempt to “run out the clock.”

Lawmakers still have the right to appeal Gibson's ruling. However, now there's a legitimate question about which maps will govern the 2026 midterms while those appeals unfold. Unless they secure a stay that blocks Gibson’s order, those new court-compliant boundaries are likely to be in place for the midterms.

Yesterday I argued that time was on the legislature's side. If lawmakers could delay until December, they could keep the current lines in place.

Gibson's ruling flips that scenario on its head, turning delay tactics from an asset into a liability.

Time used to be the legislature’s ally. Judge Gibson just turned it into a referee.


Making Slavery Great Again

It's less outlandish than it sounds.

Aug 30


Measles is not a harmless illness — complications include brain damage, immune amnesia, and death

@sacramentobee

California Gov. #GavinNewsom and his press office have taken to mimicking Donald #Trump on social media, gaining attention and audience with AI-generated images. Here are some examples. #memes #president

♬ original sound - The Sacramento Bee


 



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